Two Democratic Asian Americans have announced plans to run for the Washington State Senate seat in the 37th Legislative District in November. Each is looking to succeed Adam Kline, who will retire at the end of this year.

Louis Watanabe, who announced his candidacy Feb. 26, is a businessman and educator who is “hoping to make a change in the 37th.”

Watanabe’s number one priority is helping to put people back to work and getting our local economy back on track to create a bright future for the next generation.

As a businessman and educator, Watanabe is combining his decades of experience to run for Washington State Senate representing the 37th Legislative District to help his local community.

Watanabe grew up in Santa Monica, Calif., attended high school there, and graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles with a degree in math and applied science (physics).

“They lived behind barbed wire… from that experience, they wanted a better life for their children. Hard work and good education would open doors to good opportunities,” Watanabe explained.

Watanabe explained his parents’ situation with the Japanese proverb, “Fall seven times and stand up eight.”

“I am a person who is committed to finding a better way to break social economic barriers,” he continued.

Watanabe was also inspired by Congressman John Lewis, who worked in civil rights along with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Watanabe’s first mentor was his mother. “She learned to play the guitar, so we could do sing-alongs,” Watanabe said.

His mother also taught Watanabe how to cook, which came in handy when he was often the first one home to prepare dinner for his parents, brother, and sister.

Watanabe founded Dynamical Systems Research, Microsoft’s first acquisition. But after 18 years in the engineering and software industry, he decided it was time for a change.

He got his first exposure to the educational system as a community volunteer, helping his friend Leslie Leung critique student projects. After that, Leung asked him if he wanted to teach. Watanabe started teaching in April of 2002, and he quickly learned that teaching was not easy.

“It’s like the first of anything,” he said. “The first year was the hardest I’ve ever had. I had a certain idea of what it was to be a teacher. To teach is to learn twice.

“Once I got the notion that it was about the students — it changes the mindset about how you deliver the material,” he said.

During his first year, Watanabe didn’t always have the answers to his students’ questions, but he got better at it, and got a sense of what students really need.

For example, lectures used to work well for Watanabe in college, but when he gave a few talks on financial statements and his students still didn’t understand, Watanabe knew he had to change something. He eventually turned the material into a worksheet as a homework assignment, and then the students worked through it and discussed as a group to understand it better.

He taught business and statistics to a wide range of students for nine years at Bellevue College. He also served as business counselor at the Bellevue Entrepreneur Center helping small businesses get off the ground.

Aside from his work, Watanabe said that people would be surprised to learn that he and his wife used to teach foxtrot swing, and that he is a big fan of deep-sea fishing and the game of chess.

In addition to his teaching experiences, Watanabe has been very involved in the community.

Watanabe dedicated his time and leadership to the Bellevue College Foundation, National Education Association, Asian Counseling and Referral Service, the UW Consulting and Business Development Center, the National Association of Asian American Professionals, and the Japanese American Citizens League.

Watanabe wants to help people realize their dreams in the three issues of his platform, which is public education, social economic justice, and small businesses.

“I am passionate about people reaching their full potential,” he said, adding that the best way to ensure that is with a “great education to realize that potential and be prepared for the 21st century. It’s all an educational process.

“I’m an organizer, negotiator, and a mediator. As a founder of a company, I know what it takes to start a business and I want to bring my experience to work for things that matter to people,” he added.

Watanabe believes there is great potential in the community, and he wants to help attract the right kinds of companies to the area because it’s important to have the ideal opportunities right in the neighborhood.

“There is a big opportunity to take what’s already been invested in the neighborhood to do the things necessary to make it the real benefit of the 37th Legislative District,” he said.

Pramila Jayapal

Watanabe said he welcomes Jayapal’s entrance into the race. “The 37th Legislative District is a diverse district,” he said, “so having substantive talks about many issues is a great thing.

For more information about Watanabe, visit www.louiswatanabe.com.

Pramila Jayapal announced her candidacy on March 10. Founder and executive director for more than a decade at the immigrant rights group OneAmerica, Jayapal currently works on the national stage with the Center for Community Change on issues of race and economic opportunity, while also leading a national campaign on women and immigration. She has been deeply involved in local issues of police reform and economic justice issues.

Jayapal is currently serving as a co-chair of the committee to select a new Seattle police chief and a part of the mayor’s committee on income inequality. She is also a longtime neighborhood activist.

After nearly two decades of involvement in local issues, Jayapal said she decided to run for the seat after watching many national issues become more and more localized.

“So much is happening at the local and state level,” she said, “such as the Dream Act, voting rights, civil liberties, income inequality, and housing.”

Jayapal welcomes the candidacy of Louis Watanabe, whom she said she really likes and respects.

“We will be a better democracy, we will have better policies, and we will have a more equitable and just society if more people are engaged,” she said. “The 37th District is an amazing place to do that work.”

Jayapal enters the race with a diverse array of early endorsers, including Seattle Mayor Ed Murray, former County Executive Ron Sims, County Council member Larry Gossett, and City Council members Sally Clark, Mike O’Brien, Tim Burgess, and Tom Rasmussen.

“I am excited to seek solutions on the many challenges facing our communities, our city, and our state in a new role as State Senator,” said Jayapal, who is making her first run at elected office. “Families and working people across this district are struggling. I want to bring their voices and priorities to the State Senate, and build a district and a movement that includes every single family in this district working together for real solutions that create a beloved community.”

Born in India, Jayapal is the author of the book “Pilgrimage to India: A Woman Revisits Her Homeland” and many articles in varied publications, including The Nation, Politico, Reuters.com, The Seattle Times, and Crosscut. She has worked for over 20 years in international and domestic social justice, including for the Seattle-based international health organization, Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH).

Jayapal also worked in the private sector, on Wall Street, and in the medical equipment industry before deciding to work in the nonprofit world. She earned an MBA from the Kellogg School at Northwestern University, and a BA from Georgetown University.

It had been a general assumption by some that one of the district’s representatives, Sharon Tomiko Santos or Eric Pettigrew, might run for the vacant senate seat, but as of March 11 neither had joined the race. (end)

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